Drawing into pipette

Drawing into pipette

Kim Hairston, Baltimore Sun

Candice Jennings, 17, a rising senior at Carver Vocational-Technical High School, draws agarose gel onto a pipette, as her lab mentor, Dr. Julie Takacs, a chemistry teacher at Carver, watches. They are in the Biophysics & Biophysical Chemistry lab. Jennings is measuring light and proteins. She is one of the Baltimore teens spending eight weeks in a paid internship in Johns Hopkins biophysics labs through the molecular biophysics program Biophysics Research for Baltimore Teens (BRBT).

Candice Jennings, 17, a rising senior at Carver Vocational-Technical High School, draws agarose gel onto a pipette, as her lab mentor, Dr. Julie Takacs, a chemistry teacher at Carver, watches. They are in the Biophysics & Biophysical Chemistry lab. Jennings is measuring light and proteins. She is one of the Baltimore teens spending eight weeks in a paid internship in Johns Hopkins biophysics labs through the molecular biophysics program Biophysics Research for Baltimore Teens (BRBT). (Kim Hairston, Baltimore Sun)

Candice Jennings, 17, a rising senior at Carver Vocational-Technical High School, draws agarose gel onto a pipette, as her lab mentor, Dr. Julie Takacs, a chemistry teacher at Carver, watches. They are in the Biophysics & Biophysical Chemistry lab. Jennings is measuring light and proteins. She is one of the Baltimore teens spending eight weeks in a paid internship in Johns Hopkins biophysics labs through the molecular biophysics program Biophysics Research for Baltimore Teens (BRBT).Kim Hairston, Baltimore Sun